Alliedassault           
FAQ Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read
Go Back   Alliedassault > Lounge > Offtopic
Reload this Page What can $7 billion buy?
Offtopic Any topics not related to the games we cover. Doesn't mean this is a Spam-fest. Profanity is allowed, enter at your own risk.

 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Prev Previous Post   Next Post Next
What can $7 billion buy?
Old
  (#1)
ninty is Offline
Major General
 
ninty's Avatar
 
Posts: 12,683
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: Calgary
   
Default What can $7 billion buy? - 10-23-2003, 11:57 PM

Budget surplus
Justin Thompson, CBC News Online | October 22, 2003

Finance Minister John Manley announced that Canada's budget surplus for the fiscal year 2002-2003 was a whopping $7 billion. The entire amount, he said, will go toward paying down the national debt – keeping it to a projected $510.6 billion by the end of the fiscal year. A noble decision, indeed. On the other hand, this is Canada's sixth straight budget surplus, and debt payments aren't the most exciting way to spend $7 billion. The CBC's Justin Thompson did some window-shopping to see what else Manley could blow the money on.

An embarrassment of riches?

Here's what $7 billion will buy:

A one-time payment of $221.31 to every Canadian citizen.



58,333,333,300 Timbits ($0.12 apiece).


135,295,766 of "the most luxurious (Canadian flags) available" at Canadian Tire ($51.74 apiece after tax).


Every team in the NHL ($6.4 billion), not including player salaries.


23,728,813 hand pumps, each capable of providing an entire village with water, according to UNICEF ($295 apiece).


Another 2,046 senators for 30 years (assuming they don't get tired of their $114,000 base salary and vote themselves a raise).



Canada's national identity card plan (according to an Oct. 2003 Commons committee report)


The National Bank of Canada (Canada's sixth-largest)


13,589 Saleen S7 supercars – the world's most expensive at $515,099.75 apiece. *Freight, admin., lic. and taxes not included.


140 Bombardier Challenger 604 jets at $50 million apiece, the price the Chrétien government paid for two such jets in 2002.


(For those who are a little more shrewd, the money would buy 256 used Challengers, although they would be the 2001 model).


The Canadian Pacific Railway, with a share price value of $5,505,253,093 on October 22, 2003. That would leave enough to buy the Canadian NHL teams for a little over $1 billion.


The 7 most valuable franchises in the NFL (you'll have to secure a loan for the remaining 25).


320,512,821 Gordon Lightfoot Greatest Hits albums (at $21.84 after tax from HMV)


Or just an embarrassment?

As much as $7 billion is, it's chump change compared with:


Annual interest charges on the debt – $37.2 billion (2002-2003)


The $15 billion cash infusion called for by the Romanow Report on health care (2002).


The net worth of Kenneth Thomson and family – $18 billion


The net worth of Bill Gates – $53 billion


The price of a single Nimitz-class nuclear aircraft carrier. According to the U.S. navy, each one costs $30 billion over its lifetime to acquire, operate, support and deactivate. That doesn't include aircraft.


Happiness - priceless
  
Reply With Quote
 


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump



Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.12 by ScriptzBin
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
vBulletin Skin developed by: vBStyles.com
© 1998 - 2007 by Rudedog Productions | All trademarks used are properties of their respective owners. All rights reserved.